What are you listening two?

fergus
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Re: What are you listening two?

Post by fergus »

Alessandro Scarlatti: Motets....


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....beautiful music beautifully sung and played!
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fergus
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Re: What are you listening two?

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John Taverner's beautiful Western Wynde Mass....


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Re: What are you listening two?

Post by fergus »

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David Munrow was such a great loss at such an early age to the world of Music; he was such a talent. One often wonders what direction his music making would have taken had he lived.
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fergus
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Re: What are you listening two?

Post by fergus »

More Stanford....


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Symphony No. 7 was Stanford’s last one and a fine one it is too. It is a concise work and Stanford was apparently proud of that fact.
The Irish Rhapsody No. 3 is more of a concertante piece for cello and it is all the more interesting for that.
Stanford played the organ and I find The Concert piece for Organ & Orchestra interesting from that perspective. I like the textures in this music; the brass and the organ blend well.
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DaveF
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Re: What are you listening two?

Post by DaveF »

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Generally not of my favorite Mahler symphonies, number 3, but quite enjoyed it this evening. It must be several years since I listened to this particular version.
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Re: What are you listening two?

Post by markof »

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A very intense 3 album set of minimalist works from a variety of contemporary composers (Glass, Skempton, Reily, Cage) and popular musicians (Eno, Radiohead, Aphex Twin).
Tough going in places but powerful and beautiful none the less.
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Jose Echenique
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Re: What are you listening two?

Post by Jose Echenique »

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With so little opera being recorded these days, we are lucky that some rare ones, even new to CD, still appear. Massenet´s Le Mage was premiered at the Paris Opera in 1891, and reportedly it was a success, running to some 30 performances, but for different reasons it shortly fell into oblivion.
Like Thaïs, Herodiade, Esclarmonde and Le Roi de Lahore it has a Far East, exotic subject, so loved by French composers from Berlioz and Bizet to Ravel and Koechlin. Like the much better known Herodiade it has some very good tunes and great vocal opportunities for the leads, and the chorus also have their share of good moments.
The performance is sound and idiomatic, with especially good singing from Catharine Hunold as Anahita.
The sound quality courtesy of Radio France is satisfactory but not nearly as glamorous as the opulent score demands. Still in these sad times this would have to do because in all probability we will never get another recording of Le Mage.
On the other hand the book-like case is very fine and the documentation is ample.
Good to finally hear Le Mage.
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Re: What are you listening two?

Post by fergus »

Jose Echenique wrote:Image


With so little opera being recorded these days, we are lucky that some rare ones, even new to CD, still appear. Massenet´s Le Mage was premiered at the Paris Opera in 1891, and reportedly it was a success, running to some 30 performances, but for different reasons it shortly fell into oblivion.
Like Thaïs, Herodiade, Esclarmonde and Le Roi de Lahore it has a Far East, exotic subject, so loved by French composers from Berlioz and Bizet to Ravel and Koechlin. Like the much better known Herodiade it has some very good tunes and great vocal opportunities for the leads, and the chorus also have their share of good moments.
The performance is sound and idiomatic, with especially good singing from Catharine Hunold as Anahita.
The sound quality courtesy of Radio France is satisfactory but not nearly as glamorous as the opulent score demands. Still in these sad times this would have to do because in all probability we will never get another recording of Le Mage.
On the other hand the book-like case is very fine and the documentation is ample.
Good to finally hear Le Mage.
Interesting post Pepe. Given what you said do you know why this opera was produced and issued instead of a more well known one that surely would have had bigger sales potential?
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fergus
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Re: What are you listening two?

Post by fergus »

I spent this evening listening to the music of Tomaso Albinoni....


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Re: What are you listening two?

Post by Seán »

markof wrote:
A very intense 3 album set of minimalist works from a variety of contemporary composers (Glass, Skempton, Reily, Cage) and popular musicians (Eno, Radiohead, Aphex Twin).
Tough going in places but powerful and beautiful none the less.
I must admit I do find Glass tough going, this minimalist malarkey doesn't move me. There are times when I have found Cage interesting. I am not familiar with any of the other composer or performers on that set
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